Thursday, April 7, 2016

Poland Reflection (essay)

Now two months into the program, I can genuinely say that I have gotten to know my sixty-two classmates extremely well. We have learned, travelled, and lived incessantly with one another. Sometimes this continuous living with one another has tested our strong community, but one recent event has tested it like no other- when all sixty two of us flew to Poland in order to deeply understand the worst occurrence of the Jewish people: the Holocaust. Together, we travelled all over Poland- from the Warsaw ghetto, to the Tykocin Shtetl where traditional Jews lived before the Holocaust, to the extermination camp of Majdonek, to Auschwitz, to the Lodz ghetto, back to Warsaw. While we did learn about the thriving Jewish life in Poland prior to the Holocaust, it was often overshadowed by the horrors and unforgettable stories of what came soon after, stories that included bold acts of resistance against the Nazi government, known as Iberleben. My trip to Poland was unforgettable, and engraved in me an appreciation for Judaism along with the belief in an ever-present goodness no matter how tempting evil can be.
            While in Poland, my peers and I visited a Shtetl called Tykocin, where we learned about the lives of Jews prior to the Holocaust. A Shtetl is a Jewish population, despite residing amongst non-Jews, who lived in a distinct Jewish culture- celebrating Shabbat, keeping Kosher, speaking in Yiddush, praying daily, and not intermarrying. Tykocin was very similar to the setting of the well-known movie Fiddler on the Roof. However, this similarity between Fiddler on the Roof and the actual setting of Tykocin are not surprising, considering the man who wrote Tevya the Milkman, the book that Fiddler on the Roof is based off of, was written by Shalom Aleichem, a famous Yiddush writer who grew up in a Shtetl of his own. Shalom Aleichem also wrote The Town of the Little People, a story about a Shtetl similar to that of Tykocin. In the story, the citizens value their cemetery more than any piece of land, as it is the only piece of land that they truly own. Tykocin, to this day, also has a cemetery in a field similar to that of Kasrilevka, the Shtetl in Aleichem’s story. While most people associate cemeteries only with death, the cemeteries in Shtetls helped them to live. Because of the cemeteries, they had a land where they could “breathe freely”, and had a land where they would be proud to show their visitors. There is life in places of death, and that idea is something I will take with me from the Tykocin experience. Though the citizens of Tykocin were murdered in the forest, the forest brings Jews all over the world together in mourning. There, I saw languages from all over the world expressing both grief over Tykocin’s tragic end and confidence that the Jewish people will live on. The coming together of people is certainly something I associate with life.
            Just as Jews came all over the world to mourn at Tykocin, Jews came from all over to mourn together at Majdonek. However, there is much less life to be found at Majdonek. Rather, we walked around Majdonek hearing stories about and looking at symbols of death. The symbols that stuck out to me most at Majdonek were the ones that reminded me of the enormous number of individual lives lost during the Holocaust. The 7 ton pile of ash of Jews murdered at Majdonek initiated a realization that not only did the Jews of Majdonek die in a horrible way, but the remembrance of Jew’s life was taken away too. No one can visit an individualized grave surrounded by flowers to remember them; they can only stop by an enormous pile of ash without even the ability to know who la in that pile. They were robbed of the chance to leave an individual legacy. The only chance for me to understand what sort of people lay in that great pile of ash was when I saw a room filled with their shoes. Each one slightly different, I felt like I was afforded the slight opportunity to get to know who these people were and how they expressed themselves. In this way, the impressions that the places of life and death left on me were somewhat similar. They both allowed me to get to know others- one through death, through the shoes the Nazis took away, and one through life, through the places of gathering in Tykocin.
            During the Holocaust, or Shoah in Hebrew, people bravely participated in acts of resistance, or Iberleben, in an attempt to sanctify life. One person who participated in this was Yanuk Gorchuck, who created an orphanage for Jewish children despite his ability to flee Poland. Even when the Jewish children were being led to their deaths, he went with them. Gorchuck ensured that the children could have every last minute being children, rather than people who must mature to face death. The Nazi’s wanted to take away from the Jews the experience of being human, part of which is being a child. While the children were led to their deaths, Gorchuck successfully resisted against the Nazi’s in that when they died, they still had part of the experience of being a child- playing with one another, dressing up, and having a figure to look up to. Without Gorchuck’s brave act of resistance, they would not have this. Many doctors in the hospitals of ghettos also participated in Iberleben when they intentionally poisoned children so that they would not have to go to the chambers. While it must have been incredibly difficult to poison children and receive criticisms for doing such things, their actions saved countless lives. This story spoke to me because it made me realize that doing the right thing is not easily defined, but it is certainly not defined by what other people believe. Everyone can believe that you are a bad person, but what matters most is that you actually are a good person. Learning about these stories gives me, along with an untold number of people, hope that goodness will always exist. The non-Jews of the Holocaust had extremely convincing motives to turn a blind eye to the Jews, yet for some, their goodness at heart was stronger than anything else, even risk of death for their families. They act as a role model for me. No matter how tempting evil is, I now know that it is possible to remain good- many in the Holocaust did so.
            I disagree with Rabbi Emil Fackenheim’s 614th mitzvah, “Jews are forbidden to hand Hitler posthumous victories, they are commanded to survive as Jews, lest the Jewish people perish.” Rabbi Fackenheim is asserting that Jews have an obligation to ensure the survival of the Jewish people, in spite of Hitler. However, I do not believe that we should do anything because of Hitler, especially not create a mitzvah. Mitzvot are sacred to Jews, and are supposed to be given to us by G-d. They should not be created because of a man who attempted to murder all of us. To have humans create Mitzvot, especially Mitzvot born of spite, would lower the significance of G-d’s Mitzvot.  To act based off of Hitler, would be to give him a posthumous victory, just as allowing the Jewish people to perish would be to give Hitler a posthumous victory. Rather, we should care and act about the survival of the Jewish people because we want to and truly care about it. We can help ensure the survival of the Jewish people by creating more Jewish programs for youth, such as NFTY and BBYO. Because of programs such as these, youth will understand that Judaism is greater than a religion, and begin to understand that it is a people worth being a part of. People too often abandon Judaism because they believe that they must believe in G-d to be part of it. However, if we were to educate people on the actual heart of Judaism, and the importance of the Jewish community, people will be more obliged to be a part of it.
            Going to Poland was an experience I will never forget. I will never forget getting to know a bit of those who were robbed of the opportunity of a beautiful death. I will never forget the individualism of every one of the 6 million Jews who perished. I will never forget the goodness in people despite almost every reason to be bad. Constantly I have absent-mindedly listened to the statement “never forget” the Holocaust, but going to Poland made me realize the importance of these words. We cannot allow history to repeat itself. I believe that the Holocaust should attack everyone’s emotions, and the best way that can be done is by seeing it personally in Poland. That way, no one can forget. I know I never will.
           


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